Pubdate: Thu, 25 Jan 2007 Source: South Bend Tribune (IN) Copyright: 2007 South Bend Tribune Contact: http://www.southbendtribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/621 Author: Jason Kelly TIME FOR A BLUNT QUESTION Weeding out the troublemakers is one thing, but this is ridiculous. Kyle McAlarney received a standard pre-trial diversion from the St. Joseph County prosecutor's office. That fit a first-offense of misdemeanor marijuana possession, but only one plea applied to his appearance before the Student Affairs Committee at Notre Dame. No contest. A disciplinary suspension from the university transformed McAlarney from a leader who let down the basketball team into a victim of disproportionate discipline. Even a season-long ban from playing would have been a lot, but at least justifiable under the circumstances. This should have been a "basketball" decision to the extent that the game matters to McAlarney. Taking that away for any extended period would have sent a sufficient message. Life as a punch line for every amateur Letterman in the student section around the Big East probably would have been punishment enough. Some early suggestions for banners and chants, should he return next season: McAlarney: Notre Dame's high scorer. Follow every missed shot with, "Bong!" Shake baggies full of dimes each time he steps to the free throw line. Dime bags, get it? Because, seriously, this is a joke. Comparable misdemeanors involving alcohol -- underage drinking, public intoxication, etc. -- happen all the time with a fraction of the sanction. In 2000, three Irish basketball players were among 147 Notre Dame students cited for being underage in a tavern. Only Troy Murphy missed even a minute of playing time as a punishment, sitting out the beginning of one game. Former Irish fullback Rashon Powers-Neal, arrested for driving under the influence in 2005, sat out the rest of the football season. He stayed in school. Although alleged to be in possession of a controlled substance, an arguable reason for such a severe response, McAlarney was not charged with the more dangerous behavior of driving while intoxicated. His education did not need to enter this equation, not for a social debt the people St. Joseph County felt content to collect in community service hours. Hours he probably could have completed while the creaky wheels of campus justice cranked. Three weeks and seven games elapsed while McAlarney waited for the university to get around to rendering a decision. Ten more games in the regular season, and however many Notre Dame might play without him in March, would have harshed his mellow plenty. Instead he has to hightail off campus and decide whether he wants to return. If McAlarney chose not to seek readmission, it would be understandable. Of all the disciplinary avenues available, Notre Dame took Draconian Road, the same as if the prosecutor pursued the maximum year in jail and $5,000 fine. Students who violate alcohol or drug policies could face "warnings, fines, alcohol and/or drug assessments, education, disciplinary probation, suspension or dismissal," the university student handbook reads. Unless Notre Dame knew something the authorities did not, the decision exceeded the boundaries of discipline. Among other lessons, McAlarney learned not to mess with the "Notre Dame family" or risk excommunication. None of this absolves him of responsibility for the situation. More than a slap on the wrist and a pat on the butt on his way back onto the basketball court were required. But less, much less, than a disciplinary suspension would have been more appropriate. Notre Dame had plenty of other options on the books. Sentenced to the end of the bench for three weeks, dressed in his repentant best, McAlarney watched the Irish endure, even thrive at times, in his absence. He didn't need a semester at some community college to learn the lesson in that. To be fair, Notre Dame has a reputation for coming down hard on recreational activities that fall outside the parameters established in du Lac, the circa-1950s rulebook for student behavior. High standards, they might say. So high the judge, jury and executioner must have had the munchies when they sent McAlarney home. - --- MAP posted-by: Elaine